Image:Kovnopogrom.jpg
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Kovnopogrom.jpg (350 × 221 pixel, file size: 39 KB, MIME type: image/jpeg)
This image is from the website of the Smithsonian Institution [1] and may be copyrighted. The Smithsonian Institution explicitly considers the use of its content for non-commercial educational purposes to qualify as fair use under United States copyright law, if:
- The author and source of the content is clearly cited.
- Any additional copyright information about the photograph from the Smithsonian Institution website is included.
- None of the content is modified or altered.
It is believed that the use of these materials
- for educational purposes,
- if no free replacement could reasonably be created,
- on the English-language Wikipedia, hosted on servers in the United States by the non-profit Wikimedia Foundation,
- with the above information clearly included,
falls under the fair use provision as outlined above. Any other use of this image, on Wikipedia or elsewhere, may be copyright infringement. See Wikipedia:Fair use for more information.
To the uploader: please add a detailed fair use rationale for each use, as described on Wikipedia:Image description page, as well as the source of the work and copyright information.
"Killing of Jews in Kaunas by Lithuanian Nazi collaborators under the eyes of the SS in June 1941. When the SS mobile killing units reached Kaunas in the first few days of the war against the Soviet Union, they persuaded the anti-communist partisan leader Klimaitis to turn his forces against the Jews, to demonstrate that "the liberated population had resorted to the most severe measures against the ... Jewish enemy." The pogrom - in which 5,000 Jews were killed - was filmed and photographed by the SS."
This scene is specifically from the massacre on June 26, 1941, at the Lietukis garage in Kaunas, where, according to the US Holocaust Museum; "German soldiers and Lithuanian civilians watched Jewish men being clubbed to death or killed with high-pressure water hoses. After the war Jewish survivors and German observers gave evidence about the crime scene: Jew after Jew had to step forward to be hit on the head by young men while civilian spectators—including women with small children―watched, some of them applauding. None of the German soldiers present at the site intervened; informed about the pogrom taking place close to his headquarters, the commander of the 16th Army shrugged and noted that there was nothing he could do."
Reproduced by: US Holocaust Museum and Dokumentationsarchiv des Oesterreichischen Widerstandes For information behind the photograph, see Documents on the Holocaust: Selected Sources on the Destruction of the Jews of Germany and Austria, Poland, and the Soviet Union (Eighth Edition) Compiled and edited by Yitzhak Arad, Yisrael Gutman, and Abraham Margaliot Translations by Lea Ben Dor Introduction by Steven T. Katz
File history
Legend: (cur) = this is the current file, (del) = delete
this old version, (rev) = revert to this old version.
Click on date to download the file or see the image uploaded on that date.
- (del) (cur) 14:59, 27 July 2005 . . Goodoldpolonius2 (Talk | contribs) . . 350×221 (39,944 bytes) ({{GermanGov}} "Killing of Jews in Kovno by Lithuanian nationalists under the eyes of the SS in June 1941. When the SS mobile killing units reached Kovno in the first few days of the war against the Soviet Union, they persuaded the anti-communist partisan )
- Edit this file using an external application
See the setup instructions for more information.